Other than the fact it is 113.2 miles from where the Chargers should be playing the next two years and beyond, StubHub Center is going to be a magnificent place to watch an NFL game.

Other than the fact the outrageous prices will put money in the pocket of the Spanos family – and that’s no small caveat – it’s difficult to slam the choice by the Chargers to wade into the Los Angeles ocean by first swimming in a small pool.

Honestly, there is a 16-times-in-a-lifetime experience awaiting those who can afford it and stomach it.

There is no NFL stadium like this. There probably won’t ever be again after the Chargers move on in 2019.

(And, yes, there will be 20 Chargers “games” here over the next two seasons counting preseason contests. But those are exhibitions, not games. Paying to watch that nonsense while seated on a beach in Tahiti would not be worthwhile.)

To acknowledge this place is awesome doesn’t negate the right/duty of San Diegans to vilify Spanos, decry his choice to move and lash back at his lies.

And, sure, a stadium with a capacity of 30,000 – less than half the next-smallest NFL venue – is probably perfect for a team that slunk into L.A. and as often as not will be relegated to the inside of the local sports sections and ignored by local talk radio.

But once you get past the initial embarrassment, it’s impossible to not acknowledge the intriguing prospect of watching a game in uniquely intimate environs.

For those whose only point of reference is the gargantuan four-level Qualcomm Stadium, consider just that this place is not about only half the footprint but flows off one level.

The builders of virtually every new stadium like to boast they have “no bad seats.” After coming to the new temporary home of the Chargers, no one else should ever be able to make that claim.

I’ve been to every NFL stadium and walked around most. The home of the Baltimore Ravens affords some of the best views in the NFL from almost every corner. But saying there are no bad seats in M&T Bank Stadium would be akin to Spanos saying he “tried” to get a stadium built in San Diego for 16 years. It has some truth, but isn’t quote spot on when compared to reality.

Bill Basen was as flabbergasted as anyone when the Chargers unveiled the league’s highest season-ticket prices last week.

"I thought they were pricing me out," said Blasen, a San Diego State grad who has held Chargers season tickets for 15 years. “I was like, ‘(Forget) them.’ ”

Basen and his wife, Terry, live in Redondo Beach, about 10 miles from StubHub. Still, they sat at the home finale in Qualcomm Stadium the past two years and thought, “Well, this sucks. They’re moving to L.A. L.A. sucks.”

That is similar to the sentiment expressed by a lot of Chargers fans who live in Los Angeles. They liked the team in San Diego, where it belonged.

But Basen was clearly excited by what he saw as he toured StubHub Center on Wednesday. He’ll be on the phone at his allotted time Thursday buying four season tickets for 2017.

The seats he is eyeing are five rows from the top of the stadium, along the 20-yard line, and will set him back $1,800 each for the year. He paid $1,250 apiece last year for his seats at Qualcomm, in Plaza Section 3, which is in the lower bowl along the 30-yard line.

“This is a lot better,” he said. “I don’t mind paying $1,800 versus the $1,250 I was paying.”

For four spots – they are currently bleachers, but AEG and the Chargers are replacing them with actual seats – that is going to be an additional $2,200.

That’s how cool it is.

It’s impossible to come here on a Wednesday in February and not think how exciting it would be to be here on a Sunday in September.

In fact, the stadium and the pricing plan fits right into what the Chargers are trying to do – establish their product as something that must be experienced. Playing in the much larger Coliseum or Rose Bowl would have made them just another football game.

This place is exclusive.

There are 46 suites (prices not yet determined) and another 12 cabanas adjacent to a club that sits above one end zone but appears to hover in the air above the grass. The average price of $192 is $60 more than the highest average price in the NFL last season (charged by the Chicago Bears). It is $100 more than the league-wide average in ’16 and $107 more than the average price at Qualcomm Stadium. The Rams’ average price was $72.71 in their first year in L.A.

That is what got the publicity at last week’s announcement. Justifiably so. It’s preposterous.

But actually sitting in the seats allows you to see beyond the staggering numbers to a playing surface that is closer to the majority of seats than any other league venue.

The end zone seats that will cost $135 a game ($1,350 for the season) are on bleachers with seat backs. Standing in the middle of the 24 rows puts you at the same height and only slightly further back as when standing at the railing in the same end zone section at The Q.

The seats in the opposite end zone, also bleachers with seat backs, are $1,650. Their proximity to the field and the manner in which the rows elevate makes it seem like you could reach out and be part of a touchdown celebration. In fact, with the low wall, the first few rows could well be privy to a “StubHub Leap” after a Chargers score.

The bleacher seats that will be installed on the grass above one end zone will cost $700 for a season ticket. They might not be comfortable. But they’ll be close. And they are right in front of the gigantic high-definition video board.

John Spanos was a fool for saying it would be great to finally have a video board the coaches could see, but the truth is the thing is nice. It stretches practically from sideline to sideline, and it shows a clear picture.

The Chargers face a challenge bringing in extra toilet facilities and concessions. The ingress and egress for traffic could be messy.

But the Chargers expect to sell out in season tickets. If they have single-game tickets left, it will be because they held some back.

Their continued success when they move to the 70,000-seat stadium they will share with the Rams is not the subject here. Selling their personal seat licenses and more than twice as many tickets a game will be an entirely different challenge.

Forlorn fans of the San Diego Chargers have every right to boycott the Los Angeles Chargers. They should just know there is definitely something to see.